AT EVENTIDE. The tired breezes are tucked to rest In the cloud-beds far away, breast : Of the gleaming, dreaming bay: The shore line swims in a hazy heat, Asleep in the sea and sky, And the muffled beat where breakers meet Is a soft, sweet lullaby, Of glittering sunset glows, The roofs of brown in the town Are bathed in a blush of rose; The radiant ripples shine and shift In shimmering shreds of gold, The seaweeds lift and drowse drift, And the jellies fill and fold. The great sun sinks, heaps His cloak on the silent sea, sleeps, And the wavelets wake in glee; Across the bay like a silver star There twinkles the harbor light, And faint and far from the outer bar The sea-birds call “Good night.” —Joe Lincoln, in L. A. W. Bulletin, The Saraband’s Skipper The last half-hour of the steamship Saraband had come. All day she had lain in the pitiless bay, crouching un der fierce blast of the northeast the now all on board knew that she but a short time to live. She had had her day. Built to one hundred and twenty passeng she had once been one of the popular boats going through the newly opened canal and her long, flus! deck the many gay when her passe had under the awnings laugh, flirt and talk after dinner. But larger and faster boats had come and her glory had departed, so that after § to the east, 0 had been of gathering scene ngenr assembled to many vicissitudes here she lay, her passenger accommodations taken out and the space filled with grain from the Black Sea ports, sinking. Her decks were slanting at an angle of forty-five degrees, for the wheat had shifted, and she lay nearly on her beam ends; every movable thing had long been washed away, and one structure which should have been Im movable--the engine hatch-had also been smashed in hat v as the immediate reason why she was going to founder: the engine room plates were awash and the fires for the last two hours she had only been Kept in the stokehole were out. and head to sea by means of a sea anchor made of the derricks and spars. A portion of every sea that came on board found its way through the makeshift contrivance of spars and tarpaulins nailed over the gaping chasm in her deck that marked the former position of the engine-hateh. and each found her a little lower in the water. In the shelter of the bridge-deck the only structure which had been strong enough to resist the remorseless violence of the seas--clusterea het some hands, and gz y firemen: apathetic, save for a few, dead white spending their ing with tions of their luck in coming skipper, for not makir Crew | 3% th hard faced sallors the form quier, almost careless: the others fea Hrs ti last moments in « wi foolish, pe meaningless words, the in her, and the iz use of the two re the same ship, remaining boats which hung frown their davits at the lee side of the bridge deck, and which, from their el evatads position. had not gone when | the other boats had been Swept away, On the bridge stood the skipper and the mate, elderly men | straining their despairing eves into tI wall of mist and lessly ru bearded with, spray which relent shed down npon them. in the faint hope that some passing vessel might appear through the gloom of | the gale, At length the skipper turned and scrambled down the sloping bridge to | where the mate crouched on the lee rail. “We shall have to try the boats, | Mr. Smith; she'll not last much long er!” he shouted, the wind picking up each word as he uttered 4t and swesp ing them away to leeward. as if jeal ous of the mate hearing them. “It's a very poor chance" said the mate; “but I suppose it's our only one, How long do You give her?” : § “Half an hour at the outside. Are | the boats all ready 7" “They've been ready since morning." | Said the mate; “but con we got them | in the water unsmashed. and the tiremen rush them 7° “I don’t think 0." replied the skip per; “there's time enough enough for all to get away” But his face took a grimmer look as he led the way down the bridge to ti charthouse, the mate following him. Inside they could bear edch other with greater ease, and the skipper. while taking his revolver from a drawer. gave the mate his final instructions. “We'll lower the forward lifeboat first, as she's the biggest: you will take charge of her, got your crew aboard, and have every one in his place before we start to lower, so that you can shove off as soon as she touches the water. If those patents act you ought to be all right.” (The bonts were fitted with a patent contri. vance, by which the tackles holding them are automatically released the moment the boat is water-borne. so that there is no unhooking of blocks to Le done while the boat jx getting dashed to pieces against the ship's sido) : “I shall be all right” said the mate. “but what abont you? Who's going fe lower the falls of the after boat? won't ie You can’t manage it from the boat Iit- self, with #ll the crowd you will have on board.” “I'll lower her from the deck,” sald the skipper. “If they have a long painter made fast to the ship they can easily pull up again under the counter, and I'll make a jump for it” “Mind you don't jump short; you'd have a poor chance with those boots and, oilskins on,” sald the mate, “Oh, I'll manage,” replied the skip- per, “(Call the men up.” The men came up in a body, and the skipper came out on deck, revol- rer in hand. “The ship's sinking,” he sald, “and I have decided to take to the boats. There's plenty of time and room for all to get away in safety, if you obey my orders. You will remain standing where you are till I eall your names, then the man whose name is called whl take his place in the boat. Any i { man that starts for the boat before 1 tell him, I shoot; understand all?’ [ There was a low murmur from the | | men, and the skipper continned, i i “Mr, Smith will take charge of the | boat.” i { The mate, with a look at the skipper, { climbed Into the boat as she hung in | | the The skipper then called | the names of the crew he proposed to | in her, sending first the sailors, | 80 that the mate might place each in | { his proper station in the boat, before { the firemen, ete, who would be of no use in the critical manoeuvres of get ting her away from the ship's side, davits | send | ing between this plateau and the boundary of Brazil, which has re. sources of great wealth. 1 have met at night he steals forth In search of something to eat. Something to eat In the birds’ nests by the young gap- lings, or, If there ix not enough of it to appease his ravenous appetite and the mother of a brood Is absent, he will help himself to a nestling. But woe betide that crab detected by a bird mother in the act of robbing her nest, Her sharp bill soon beats through the marauder's brittle shell and his flesh Is distributed among those very gaplings he had fondly hoped to feast upon. When the plume hunters make thelr annual _ predatory ineur- slons into the regions of breeding here ons and the parent birds are driven from the nests, the blue crab comes forth In swarms and makes the slaughter complete by devouring all the young.—~New York Sun. Unexplored Bolivia. The richest paris of Bolivia have provinces here which are practically There are some sections edges of the Sahara. There is a strip and about five hundred miles long, ly- to Paraguay, and the Argentine. They tell me of vast plains upon which cat crowded her up. Jut these same fire: | te feed in herds of thovsaafs, They men did not understand his reason, | van be bought for from $2 to $3 a and thought he was showing undue head, for there is no weanx of getting preference to his own men, and. a them to the markets. At present heavier sea than sual striking the | Senor Ballivian tells me there Is 4 S¥1N- steamer, there was a cry of “She's g0 | dicats formed in London to connect ing down, and he's sending the sailors first” and a rush for the boat, of navigation of some of the Amazon Stand back!’ egied the skipper. branches Ly means of a railway “Crack! and the leading fireman | hich will run along the boundary be- spread out his hands and pitched on | tween Brazil and Bolivia, but on Bra his face, rolling in a Hmp bundle | zilian soil I'he road will be on the down on the lee rail, The rest of the line of a concession granted to Colonel men stopped. They might as well be Church sone years ago, and its pur drowned as shot, they thought, and | pose will be to carry these cheap cat. they huddled together, looking with | tls to the rubber camps of the Ama horritied glances at thelr dead com zon. There are several other impor. rade. The skipper paused, lowered | tans vrojects to build allroads In Bo his revolver, and then called the next | livia, Goo is to construct a line from name; they had learned thelr lesson, fa Paz to the Desuaguadero river and went quietly to the boat, whi I'his line would be kixty-five miles got safely away, and drifted out of long, and Senor Ballivian says it will sight in the midst of the gale, | probably be begun this summer. An The other boat was filled without other scheme is to extend the Cen any mishap, and the skipper, the only | tral North Argentine rallway to Sucre. man left on the deck, lowered her: she This road is now near the Bolivian also got clear away and drifted out to | border. and it would pass through a the full length of her painter, The ch cattle-grazing., agricultural and skipper walked aft to walt for them mining territory, and would furnish to haul up again, He had to pass the an outlet to the Atlantic for Bolivian body of the dead man, and he did not nroduots There are several other look at it. The boat was hauling up | plans for rallroads from the Argentine on the painter, and was getting close: | inte Bolivia, and the day will prob. the skipper got on the rail ready to {| ably come when all of eastern Bolivia jump. At that moment a fireman, the will he opened] to settlement Frank brother of the man he had shot, reach v. Larpenter in Atlanta Constitution, ed over the boat's bow, and, with a —— ery of “Blast you, stop and drown | The American Sailor. ith Bill" eut the nainter Ee ar Se a the ship and Jacky who used 30 be mare sanoe the boat began to widen iustantls fuan gunner, I8 now more gunn thas and In spite of the fraoptie efforts of sailor Just u PrODOstion ak he has the sailors at the oars, the deeply la. | "2% to be a part of the great engin den boat was swept away and blotteq | 20 WHICH Le Lives, 80 he has conus iow Prprsre + wi .t : . more amd more into the control of down from the mils and made his Abd a8 the iin - sl on way back to the bridge deck. He had | ©" a Fae rand Ha} purpose Hn al just ten minutes to live. Ten minutes | SP 8 10 wh things with her projec to "H for ti next world, after Jan become a Speciahst in forty years at sean work out of her. He does , : : aces—-at the guns amd at He climbed up bridge again, | 4, engines Correctly pointed guns ind sat on the windscreen to | 400 of no use unless the platform on think. His wife and children, who | wpion they rest is put in proper rela would look after them now? His | yon 10 the thing to be hit, and kept | wages were $80 per month: on that he there! equally it {s useless to get fhe had had but small chance to save, | ship into proper place unless the guns Well, he supposed the Shipmasters' | for her, but she would have to give up her lit tle Forest Gate, and drop from the position of a captain's wife | ia la in or = house at children would be got into an orphan age: if pot, well, it meant starvation { oty of that ruck of marine refuse or the workhouse, He thought of his | which drifts around the great mari : Ri f 5 : Hi i ii own life, of his hard, ill-used bovhood. | fime ports and ships in any eraft of his manhood spent In unremitting toll in all parts of the world: of the various ships he had commanded, In each of which he had been expected to use less coal, less paint, fewer pro visions 1 il 0 i | ¥ in and to go with smaller crews | than the He thought of th Be blackguards he had had to command a8 crews, amd the trouble he had had | in fast | No man or boy ean now pass a United with them, and the old sailor prover) | States naval recruiting officer unless | rose to his lips: “To live hard, work {| he is clean, healthy, honest, young. har fe hiner - or avy st’ % 1 ss: ¥ hard. die hard. and go to Davy Jones * | strong and Intelligent: nor can he locker after all, would be too hard” Well, he'd not had much fun out of life, and now he was going to find out | what it all meant, Anyway, he had always done his best for his ship. Hig eye fell on the dead body of the fireman. That too! If the man should rich grazing lands with the head Ie re correctly pointed.” Men who can 0 either of these things must have atural capacities and be susceptible education, and only men of this Accordingly the “beach-comber.”™ Ar other vard i% no longer slings his hammock u Uncle Sam's berth-deck, as he used » do to the shame of the service cars gone by, in Nor ean the tramp, or the jail-bird. nor even the incorri- ible black sheep of the family thus of Con. relatives to the relief and long-suffering | indict him at the bar of the last Judy. t ment he would answer thers, as he { would have answered to an earthly court: “In my jndgment it was neces. | sary for the safety of the men in my { charge.” A sudden quiver warned | bimi she was nearly gone. and he rose to his feet for one last look to wind. ward. As he looked into the blinding spray. he saw a large wave come out | of the mist, and knew it would swamp her. He gripped the rafl with both hands, and his lips moved In a half forgotten prayer. “Our Father. which art” and the wave swept on. But the Saraband had gone. The skipper had gone to meet his fireman where “there shall be no more sea.” Temple Bar. A AS SSS The Trusting Crab. What do you think of a erab which trusts to the birds to feed him? Sounds like a fairy tale, doesn’t itY But it is a fact, for all that. This son oF Can- cer, which is large and cuaite Llue in color, lives among the heron rol eries in the lower part of Florida, where he tligs n house in the sand under Jdeift logs or large stones. It i% pot often that he veutures abroad by day, bu: (Hiants of Patagonia. The tribes to the east of the Cor dilleras, in southern Patagonia, belong to Araucanian stock, and are a supe rior race. The Tehueciches—as they call themselves—of southern and east. ern Patagonia. are the people whose unusual stature gave rize to the fables of the early days to the effect that the natives of this region were giants averaging nine or ten feet in height. It 1s a fact that they are the tallest human beings in the worl, the men averaging but slightly less than six feel, while individuals of four to six imches above that mark are not nn. common. They are in reality by no means savages, but somewhat elviie ized barbarians. They are almost un. acquainted with the use of firearms. notwithstanding some contact with the wiiltes, but they have plenty of horses and dogs, Unsurpassed Hunters, they caphirs the guanaco and the rhea, or South American ostrich, and from the skins of these and other animals ther make clothes and coverings for thelr tents, They make beautiful “capes,” or man- ties, of furs and feathers, which are highly prized by Buropeans nnd find 4 ready market.—Bostou Tranrerivt “ SHANG HY ” PIERCE'S STAMPEDE. lodians and a Thunder Storm Crushed the Cattle Until They Lost Their Horns. “Tne savorite story with all cattle. 4 man witnesses one he never for gols it “I have heard many tales of the kind, but never a better one than that told by A. H. Pierce, known all over the range country as ‘Shang Hy Plerce, tel in Kausas City, remember Jt As near as [ can was as follows: ‘Several yours ago I started from the range of Texas with 2,000 cattle which 1 It was the regular routine work to gather them from the ranges in Tex- as and start the drive. Of course, we expected that we would get to Kansas in due time and without trouble, I had driven innumerable herds over the trail and very seldom had any trouble, I did not auticipate trouble on trip. as when I started out I had with me the best lot of cow punchers that ever left Texas, ‘It was a beautiful sight he when we over Kansas (ty. Through thick gue horses could red hand men,” said W, ® Anderson of Chi | ence for six or seven centuries, and at cago, "ix one of a stampede. When | present its value is about $210 a year, started out, driving 2.000 long -horned | A correspondent of the New York stenrs, The men were all in good | Sun has just finished up a journey spirits, planning to daub red paint all among the non-combatants of Penn erty to be distributed among the poor of the parish, and among all whe care to apply for a dole of bread and cheese on Kaster day. This benefaction has been In exist Formerly the doles consisted of bread and cheese and ale, but the latter pro- duced so much hilarity In the village | that it was abolished, and the charity is now Hmited to the two first men. tioned nutritive articles, The bread is { made up in the form of cakes, bearing SERGEANT WALKER'S FEAT Sat Down ona Spanish Shell at Sastiage and Found it Het, Bergeant ‘Arthur Brown of the Ninth Massachusetts wrote thus from the trenches before Santiago during the slege: “We arrived at the battlefield at about noon and were lined up in posi tion behind a hill BE FOROTYes and to protect the food and ammund tion. Bullets were whistling over our heads in a perfect storm: but we were to act rude representation of the Twin | becoming quite used to that sort of {| Maids of Biddinden, which are gen. | thing, and, being tired ont, we lny i i | | i A i 1 { erally preserved as curiosities Ly ihe | recipients. ‘They sre baked very hard, and are admirably adapted to zive | work breaking the ! | dentists by i | molars of those who attempt to pene i to | trate their mysteries. ‘The poor of the | parish, distinguished from | sitous strangers, are supplied with or- | dinary quartern and as neces. loaves Cheese PENNSYLVANIA NON-COMBATANTS. | Sects That Do Not Believe in War, but Are Patriotic Nevertheless. sylvania, Dunkers Mey Amish, inciude Quakers, Menugonites, Anabap down on the ground and tried to keep cool. While were lying there a» shell dropped at the feet of Sergeant Walker, not three feet from him. Fort unately it did not explode; if it had the whole company would have been Wie wiped out, “It gave some of the boys such a fright that they started to run. but Bergeant Walker called them back and assured that danger was passed and that he was going to use it for a seat. He walked over to it and planked himself down, but he had 00 more than when he nmped about five feet in the alr and grabbing himself by the seat of the trousers, yelled: “It's hot! them the touched it “We stayed there all the afternoon » Rp fu OF 2 a aR? #1 we Seen tists, Morzviaus, and a few other in-|a.4q of + shooting stopped, and Lerchiof if the ¥ : t 3 4 Sp *f Lng t f repent aried & k kKerchiefs « the Sowhoys 15 ey dem ndent ots of PL Ign A we all ay n to sleep and dream ¢ + gh 5 ot 4 ef yg this | A +} iv : at t - yp Cary dashed up and down, gathering the | for the genuine stock of Quakers. ve ¥ lof fresh bread. lobster salad an : herd together and swearing In a loud | few young, able-bodied nu were Seell. f thinos We wet suddenly aw: aod good-natured manner In many sectio hie Qual Heeling he o rifie shot “Thon Wa warn abot foi 1 Micha ” ’ 4 oe ' ¢ ! When wie Wels out about four days | hous 11 ed A pile Points | in an instant Fe met a smal 4 { ndians 0 ¥ i f i "i we met a sm ill band of Indians, wh feet "i 1] i feet and armed bothered us until we drove them awas ir twice a th a 1 v elderly | nant Inte } on We go into quite a fight over the mat people come from around to ter. We discovered them early in the | wy ship i § x ho i nthe morning and by afternoon wy RO 51 i at Wy id y ZO y Wat all abont the ins and were buss wen if mnt : They taking care of our stock. W knew | of se denne va i are op Hat 1 heavy storm was cor or p yd I 0 blood i it § ir wanted to g 01 i prett % tensely lova 1 { i i 1 before dark. so we 114d 1 y, and 8 olt n | y . ii d WM easily in ca »f MIG ub g 1 ; | i Wwenther { Ji k = god i Lhnt nigh ere wa i i i gave i ) ution baasé & 4 thay ha * oy n 1 ad wt in the erd and we n i get a | and ted ¥ other | N of r men were large numb ff the i hotg % } p fre hit the herd er Wis saved i ! { wile was caused by the 1 t Mennon \ n I . : Desert Ships. whom wl be ! g ‘ ng od te vor har 1 16) vols very siowle By the flashes of lg g wn SAW ers are dy ny oR i thet Film ng iw i Me ers A A A . 3 : - ‘ to to 4G ya HANDS In an opposite dire on 10 3! Wi i n pos 41 } : tempted taken by the herd tar s , If x rr Lid i ‘BER I'he stampede start wrtiy after farn 2 + 1 : : ‘ ¥ 3 ng 0 miduight and I do not believe | w I 2 selon y a different ' forgs y at I went : igh 1 ft go } & I : tall more gles for Mvigi Fhe Indians sat red 8 fe w : $ y fs w . 2 ! a unan t flank o i thd wo rest i " } s them, until the w i i good 7 d. in the matter of 1 if "irs ft a wink Ww mut 13s § y 3 i 1 i N nd mounted and aft rd r. b ghhred does e cab trying to stop tl stamped and § LH irge 8 them together 1 2 8 Very « "‘Bhortly after e Kiam je ut ed to Ww on the storm began and the bright flas their we a . of lig 1g i ¢ § rovd 2 i I have s¢ Wg “4 nder added ved yf i iv 1 reminded 1 ina f: eattl Ab risa ’ ut = 1y. of Newmarks The and a ler of ¢ hoof f ! i od in fd Sttle 1 could hea Y men ling i ios ' e air Ir { 1 "yy to ng of 0 yal i DAO 1% if they w Tr % eo vol i i short stan 4 ie gels IRIADS tog er until they re 4 af fis od : i ght 1 161 $ WW = J AAT AEa this Ww down to their habitual od to streak yward 1% 51 yf an fa yi oe race ith jong ! i | of the rushi ind in a short eerfully do so. A bag of I 1 e als en i cal time had them going is a rele, mil r bacon we i of veallel race, : it re of tl ling f potatoes hy { first motorcar promenade between With thie RLOT Coa kad od by load nd ny i London and Brighton I't amels and we « ' OVOTrY movement, Af IS Are to the % were certainly not so broken down and aq orev Pony &% B SVs iar ter we once got the herd going a hese 1 ants do pot§ bedraggied, but they came at in circle it was easy to keep them 1 h we musi or draw the} vais of several hon and ane » a er, and our efforts were directed {o Y Aa w ig to do hey Hence Was Decessary oo watch them § 3 eins ¥ £ aidic Fa roa wn weed gos ward making the elircle so small that Ring care of soldiers’ fam. |] aivive, 3 y " 3 * loft hind —— - ————— the stampede would be “toned, Ax hes wh nd it grew smaller nothing but a moving ——— An lnsolent Bey. bunch of great horns could be seen Ancient Signalling. I am reminded of the little boy who above the herd. And they Kept milling » fabulous honor of being the frst applied for a job at a squire’s house, and milling and milling.’ nventor of the art of signalling is be] where he could carn five shillings a “Here the story teller st ped stowed by certain classical writers up| week by making himself generally take a chaw of tobacco and one of the on the ingenions Palamedes, save al useful. saves a writer in London An interested listeners interruptea to | writer in Cornhil Magazine This | gwers know what happened next hero may have introduced improve Squire-Can you clean silver? “Well continued Pierce. “t ey Kept ments in detail, but it is certain that Boy—-Yes sir milling and milling, and when they | long before the time of the Trojan war “Can you cook and light fires and stopped I found that in their milling | the Egyptians and the Assyrians, if eing and dust old china and make they had ground all their horns off, | not the Chinese and other nations of boda 7 and 1 drove the herd into Kansas and | remote antiquity. of wiom monumen “Oh. ves gir" #old them for muleys.'” tal records alone remain to us, had “Can you clean bicycles and repair ——— developed regular methods of signal punctured tires and tune pianos?” ling by fire, small flags. ot “UertXinly, sir.’ The Effect of Wind on Lakes. i as J ? d LB Ag . Ls 1 tainly, Bir A ‘ : ihe great wall built by the Chinese “Tan you mend electric bells and do ttontio as been of wi to the very | a = x . . . ; d x oh off i called ad he vers | ages ago, and 1.500 miles long. 8) plumbing and gas fitting, feach mod fmarganie off of The Witk » YAri- | wees rs va paan . . Cis t a In 1 bod : fd on varl-{ studded with towers. Between these| orn and ancient languages, geography Oils § MH 0 8 Tr Bk | f a # . fad on By 24 #5 % a " ns inland les of water It is not | signals were interchanged when troops | and the use of globes?" unusual for the residents in towns on had to be collected in order to resist the shores of lakes to be greatly ine | convenienced, provided a heavy wind blowing on shore continues for any length of time. level has been altered for upwards of | eight feet. Sometimes the water is | $ In the Baltic Sea the | i most dry. In one instance a depres. Lake Erie has been known to alter its level one side, that peo where in The Legacy of Bread. Crowds of people from all parts of attack at any point threatened by the | ¢ Tartars or “outer barbarians.” 55 Ma. Jor Boucheraeder and others it has “1 ean. and also do anything else hat is required.” “Then I think you will do.” Rav-Thank you. sir. By the way. is been considered that the huge tower of Babel was erected for similar as well as for a number of different purposes, That Ts to say, for the signalling not necessarily of any particular words or sentences, but of expected events, im. your house built on a clay soil? Squire—Well, it happens that it is But what has that to do with you? “Well, 1 thought you would like me to Sil up my spare time by making bricks.” perial decrees, military orders and He was not engaged for his in other matters Intended to be under | (lence. : stood through conventional signals, a ———— whether of lights, flags, semaphores or other devices, by all the motley host of nationalities and languages of which the Chaldean empire was com. posed. —8an Francisco Chronicle. She Enjoyed an Earthquake. An old lady from Oxford. Mich. who with her husband had spent the winter in California. was asked by one of her neighbors if she had heard an earth. quake while in California. “Yes, I heard one,” she answered, “and rather enjoyed it, for it was the first thing that happened since John and I have been married that he did not think [ was to blame for.”-—8an Francisco Argonaut. One of Cuba's names, bestowad tip- i a £ Mer. Gladetone’s Name. A correspondent of the Loadon Chronicle writes to point out that none of Mr. Gladstone's biographers appear to have deait with the etymology of his name, which must be assigoel to the category of placenames. Its orig. inal spelling. which seems to have been “Gladstane,” or “Gledstane” was probably the name of some bor. der lairdship or farm, so-called from the rock or enirn used by the “glad” — which is lowland Scotch for kite or hawk-as a favorite perch. Tis exact equivalent iz to be found In the Ger man “Falkenstein,”™ used as a place-name and patronymic. the ‘former, of course, being of prior usage. This is the pure Germanized form of the Scottish “Gledstane” or “Gladstone.” International analogue jn. Detect Sump dre Yory aterngt.